LoJack Releases Its 2015 Construction Equipment Theft Study
LoJack, a wholly-owned subsidiary of CalAmp and a leader in vehicle and construction equipment theft recovery and advanced fleet management solutions, recently announced that law enforcement officials throughout the United States recovered more than $6.6 million in stolen construction equipment and machinery equipped with the LoJack System for Construction and Commercial Vehicles and Equipment in 2015.
LoJack’s “2015 Construction Equipment Theft Recovery Report” and infographic highlights the ongoing problem of thieves targeting construction businesses for their high value equipment. The report identifies equipment categories and classes, manufacturers, and geographies where theft is most likely to occur. Heavy equipment is the most vital asset of construction businesses. Contractors and rental fleet owners not only lose valuable assets, but also lose efficiency and miss schedule deadlines when equipment is stolen. The cost of equipment theft can be devastating to the national economy generally, as well as to the profitability of small and large businesses alike.
The 2015 LoJack Construction Equipment Theft Recovery Report revealed the following:
In 2015, over $6.6 million* worth of assets were recovered on construction equipment installed with the LoJack System. Replacing those assets, if not recovered, would have cost their owners approximately $11 million.*
Since the study began, more than $180 million** worth of stolen heavy equipment has been recovered using the LoJack System.
The top equipment types recovered in 2015 were also those most popular on the jobsite:
- Towables (33%) — generators, air compressors, cement mixers, and welders
- Wheeled and Tracked Loaders (28%) — used to shovel or move material around
- Skid Loaders (20%) — specialty vehicles with a range of powered attachments
- Excavators (7%) — used to dig and move large materials
- Utility Task Vehicles (6%) — used in residential markets as well as construction

- 1. Bobcat (25%)
- 2. John Deere (15%)
- 3. Multiquip (6%)
- 4. Caterpillar (6%)
- 5. CASE (6%)
In 2015, 64% of the equipment stolen was less than five years old
In 97% of theft and recovery cases, equipment was retrieved in the same state
A 2014 National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) report indicated that up to $1 billion is lost nationwide due to construction equipment theft and only 20% of it is ever recovered by law enforcement. Construction equipment thieves are increasingly part of large, organized crime rings that target high value equipment. Unlike vehicle identification numbers (VIN), construction equipment does not have standardization in production identification numbers (PIN), which makes the assets more difficult to track and recover by law enforcement.

